Who Powers Whom? Search Providers Chart: Sept. 2002

Many major search engines get their results by turning to third-party "search providers" to "power" their listings. To make matters more confusing, these search providers may run their own search engine sites, as well.

The chart below explains who the major providers are. Knowing who powers whom is helpful for those who are wondering which companies are "winning" in the competitive market of powering search.

This information is also helpful to webmasters and search engine marketers trying to understand where to get listed. If this is your goal, also read the Search Engine Results Chart. That table is more oriented for those looking to get listed with different search engines. It shows all the major search engines and how they get their listings, with links leading to submission help from Search Engine Watch's Essentials Of Search Engine Submission guide.

Beneath the chart is a key. To learn more about a particular search engine or search provider, just click on its name. You'll be taken to the appropriate section of Search Engine Watch's Major Search Engines page.

Search Providers: These are listed at the top of each column. Read down to see what they power at major search engines. Click on their names to learn more about them. The most significant providers are listed first, in terms of the reach Search Engine Watch feels they have across the major search engines.

Search Engines: These are listed at the beginning of each row, in order of "search hour" popularity, as explained on the Nielsen//NetRatings page.

Search engines with more than 4 million search hours per month come first and are shaded dark orange. Partnerships with these search engines thus counts for more importance than with others.

Search engines with 2 million or more search hours per month are shaded light orange, then those with 300,000 or more search hours are shaded light blue.

Those shaded in gray have no significant search hours reported, but they are shown because of the name recognition they may have among serious searchers.

Main: Indicates that a search provider provides the "main" editorial results to a particular search engine, the most dominant listings that will be seen.

Paid: Indicates that a search provider provides paid listings to a particular search engine. Also see the Buying Your Way In page for detailed information about paid listing partnerships.

Note that Terra Lycos plans to release its own paid listing program in late 2002. Ads will run on Terra Lycos-owned Lycos and HotBot, as well as AllTheWeb.com. These will NOT replace existing partnerships to carry paid ads from Overture. The Terra Lycos To Launch Paid Placement Network article provides further details.

Backup: Indicates that a search provider provides the "backup" results that appear in cases where a search engine's main results fail to find good matches. See the Search Engine Results Page for more about "backup" or "fallthrough" results.

Option: Indicates that information from this source is made available either on results pages or in other ways, though the prominence of the information may not be high.

Notes: These are additional notes relevant to some search engines listed in the rows of the chart.

The U.K. Supreme Court has granted permission in part for Google to appeal against a ruling relating to a dispute over the user information through cookies via use of the Apple Safari browser.
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